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Genomes of ubiquitous marine and hypersaline Hydrogenovibrio , Thiomicrorhabdus and Thiomicrospira spp. encode a diversity of mechanisms to sustain chemolithoautotrophy in heterogeneous environments

Authors :
Cheryl A. Kerfeld
Eva Chase
Jason C. Richardson
Tara L. Harmer
Chris Daum
Emily A. McIntyre
Nicole Shapiro
Kaleigh M. Nelson
Darren S. Dunlap
Brittney D. Moore
Manoj Pillay
Kimmy N. Nguyen
Marcel Huntemann
Neha Varghese
Maki Tabuchi
Christie K. Campla
Michael R. Solone
John Williams
Natalia Ivanova
Rich Boden
Alicia Clum
Zachery R. Staley
William A. Morgan
Elizabeth M. Fahsbender
T. B. K. Reddy
Courtney Lewis
Dawn B. Goldsmith
Gary J. Camper
Christina M. Rodgers
Dimitrios Stamatis
Jessica A. Mine
David G. Parrino
Leila G. Casella
Pauline Wanjugi
Brent L. Schaffer
Elizabeth A. Rampersad
Suzanne Young
Ryan Keeley
Anangamanjari D. Pedapudi
Breanna I. Kussy
Stephanie Lawler
Cody M. B. Porter
Kathleen M. Scott
John H. Paul
Nancy E. Sheridan
Nicholas Ogburn
Paola A. Mancera
James W. Conrad
Nikos C. Kyrpides
Ramond J. Waide
Rebecca P. Pelham
Tanja Woyke
Mercedez C. Cruz
Krishnaveni Palaniappan
Matthew R. Kondoff
Sydney Russel
Sharyn K. Freyermuth
Evan C. McClenthan
Brittany Leigh
Natalia Mikhailova
Swapnil Modi
Amanda M. Preece
Lygia M. Lostal
Devon Marking
Megan K. Bridges
Laura Duran
Kirsten M. Antonen
Marannda K. Lane
Source :
Environmental Microbiology. 20:2686-2708
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

Chemolithoautotrophic bacteria from the genera Hydrogenovibrio, Thiomicrorhabdus and Thiomicrospira are common, sometimes dominant, isolates from sulfidic habitats including hydrothermal vents, soda and salt lakes and marine sediments. Their genome sequences confirm their membership in a deeply branching clade of the Gammaproteobacteria. Several adaptations to heterogeneous habitats are apparent. Their genomes include large numbers of genes for sensing and responding to their environment (EAL- and GGDEF-domain proteins and methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins) despite their small sizes (2.1-3.1 Mbp). An array of sulfur-oxidizing complexes are encoded, likely to facilitate these organisms' use of multiple forms of reduced sulfur as electron donors. Hydrogenase genes are present in some taxa, including group 1d and 2b hydrogenases in Hydrogenovibrio marinus and H. thermophilus MA2-6, acquired via horizontal gene transfer. In addition to high-affinity cbb3 cytochrome c oxidase, some also encode cytochrome bd-type quinol oxidase or ba3 -type cytochrome c oxidase, which could facilitate growth under different oxygen tensions, or maintain redox balance. Carboxysome operons are present in most, with genes downstream encoding transporters from four evolutionarily distinct families, which may act with the carboxysomes to form CO2 concentrating mechanisms. These adaptations to habitat variability likely contribute to the cosmopolitan distribution of these organisms.

Details

ISSN :
14622920 and 14622912
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4999e5d4c9041abf454009e15d97e5c8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.14090